Never Mind The Bar Charts

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 110:06:27
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Sinopsis

Stephen Tall and Mark Pack talk about the Liberal Democrats, British politics and a few stray digressions. Occasionally features Brexit.

Episodios

  • Inside the mind of Boris Johnson, with Caroline Pidgeon

    01/12/2020 Duración: 32min

    Caroline Pidgeon, Liberal Democrat member of the London Assembly and someone who saw Boris Johnson up close during his eight years as Mayor, joined me for the latest episode of Never Mind The Bar Charts. We discussed how Boris Johnson behaves as a politician, his strong desire to be liked, his long track record of wasting public money and more. I hope you enjoy the show. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes The Garden Bridge. The SS Richard Montgomery. The wasteful water cannons. The Deputy Mayors problem. City Hall moving. CrossRail2. That Susan Kramer song. Luisa Porritt. Me and graffiti. Caroline Pidgeon on Twitter. Music by Hugo Lee. New to listening to podcasts? Here are some tips on how to listen to podcasts. Enjoy the show? Spread the word Follow the show on Twitter. Like the show on Facebook. Share the show's website, www.NeverMindTheBarCharts.com.  

  • The dilemma for progressives: lessons from the US 2020 elections

    12/11/2020 Duración: 41min

    I was joined again on Never Mind The Bar Charts by Rob Blackie to talk about the early lessons from the 2020 US Presidential elections for the Liberal Democrats. With Rob as a guest, no surprise that we talked a lot about messaging and political positioning. In particular, how do you win over people who have a different world view? Listen to find out... Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes What the Liberal Democrats can learn from Donald Trump - the earlier episode with Rob Blackie. 2020 US Presidential election results. The (non-) use of Latinx. Winning the struggle for same-sex marriage: how framing the argument using the world view of its opponents helped persuade many of them to change their mind. Graham Norton. Photo by Andrew Neel from Pexels. Music by Hugo Lee. New to listening to podcasts? Here are some tips on how to listen to podcasts. Enjoy the show? Spread the word Follow the show on Twitter. Like the show on Facebook. Sha

  • A fresh way of talking about liberal values, with Tom King

    07/11/2020 Duración: 38min

    Tom King, author of excellent pamphlet The Generous Society, was my guest for the latest episode of Never Mind The Bar Charts. We talked about his new pamphlet, the importance of generosity to liberals and what Liberal Democrats can pick up from Joe Biden's electoral victory.  Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes Read The Generous Society. John Stuart Mill's On Liberty. Jim Hacker wonders how best to do a political broadcast. Michael J Sandel's The Tyranny of Merit: What's Become of the Common Good? - Bookshop / Amazon.* Tom King on Twitter. Music by Hugo Lee. New to listening to podcasts? Here are some tips on how to listen to podcasts. Enjoy the show? Spread the word Follow the show on Twitter. Like the show on Facebook. Share the show's website, www.NeverMindTheBarCharts.com.   * This list includes affiliate links which generate a commission for each sale made.

  • Myth busting media coverage of election campaigns and social media

    21/10/2020 Duración: 46min

    I recently guested on Michael Bossetta's Social Media and Politics show, talking about... social media and politics. In particular, how the media coverage of election campaigns and their use of technology so often gets it wrong. Hope you enjoy the chat, and if you do, by all means grab the relevant chapter of my book, Bad News: what the headlines don't tell us, which is available for free here. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes Bad News: what the headlines don't tell us. Free book chapter. Michael Bossetta. The excellent Social Media and Politics podcast. Music by Hugo Lee. New to listening to podcasts? Here are some tips on how to listen to podcasts. Enjoy the show? Spread the word Follow the show on Twitter. Like the show on Facebook. Share the show's website, www.NeverMindTheBarCharts.com.

  • The origins and course of pro-Europeanism in the Lib Dems

    14/10/2020 Duración: 53min

    Why did the Liberal Party become so pro-European and how did that carry over into the Liberal Democrats? That was the topic when I welcomed back Duncan Brack to Never Mind The Bar Charts. We roamed over everything from the creation of the Anti-Corn Law League through to the future for pro-Europeanism in the Lib Dems. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes Our Jo Grimond episode. The motion on Europe passed at the party's 2020 conference. Peace, Reform and Liberation: A History of Liberal Politics in Britain 1679-2011, compiled by Robert Ingham and Duncan Brack. Free Trade Nation: Commerce, Consumption, and Civil Society in Modern Britain by Frank Trentmann: Waterstones / Amazon. The Liberal Democrat History Group. It's special journal issue on Europe is available for free. Duncan Brack on Twitter. Music by Hugo Lee. Image by MichaelGaida from Pixabay. New to listening to podcasts? Here are some tips on how to listen to podcasts. Enjoy th

  • Culture wars, Brexit and electoral reform, with Rob Ford

    02/10/2020 Duración: 45min

    What caused Brexit? Was it inevitable? Why do the right love fighting culture wars even though each culture war gets fought on more liberal territory? Those were just some of the questions covered in a wonderfully wide-ranging discussion with Rob Ford.  Not Rob Ford, the scandal-prone Mayor of Toronto, or Rob Ford, the man who killed Jesse James, or even Rob Ford, the Dundee FC footballer. But Rob Ford, Politics Professor at Manchester University and co-author of the new book, Brexitland: Identity, Diversity and the Reshaping of British Politics. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes Brexitland: Identity, Diversity and the Reshaping of British Politics by Rob Ford and Maria Sobolewska: Waterstones / Amazon. Left Out: The Inside Story of Labour Under Corbyn by Gabriel Pogrund and Patrick Maguire: Waterstones / Amazon. The New Minority: White Working Class Politics in an Age of Immigration and Inequality by Justin Gest: Waterstones / Amazon.  W

  • Who is going to win the US Presidency?

    23/09/2020 Duración: 59min

    I headed across the Atlantic in the latest episode of Never Mind The Bar Charts to talk about the US elections. For that I was joined by US politics podcaster Karin Robinson of the Democratically: 2020 show. We talked about Biden's chances, nerded out over the US postal service, discussed how the TV debates may go and more. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes 5 Myths About the Postal Crisis - Politico. Vote from Abroad. Kevin Rudd's winning 2007 election strategy. Five Thirty Eight - a website and a podcast. Talking Points Memo. The New York Times's Nate Cohn. Marc Elias / Democracy Docket. American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Democratically: 2020 podcast. Karin Robinson on Twitter. My appearance on Karin's podcast to discuss Bad News. Music by Hugo Lee. Photo of Joe Biden courtesy of janeb13 / Pixabay. New to listening to podcasts? Here are some tips on how to listen to podcasts. Enjoy the show? Spread the word Follow the show

  • Lib Dem European policy, how the leadership election went and more

    16/09/2020 Duración: 01h03min

    The Lib Dem Podcast joined up again with Never Mind The Bar Charts for a special show looking at the latest issues facing the Liberal Democrats. John Potter and Tom Morrison joined me to review the leadership contest as well as to discuss the debate about when the Lib Dems should be campaigning to rejoin the EU. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes The Lib Dem Podcast. Music by Hugo Lee. New to listening to podcasts? Here are some tips on how to listen to podcasts. Enjoy the show? Spread the word Follow the show on Twitter. Like the show on Facebook. Share the show's website, www.NeverMindTheBarCharts.com.

  • The future for liberalism, with David Howarth

    09/09/2020 Duración: 48min

    China's changing foreign policy, tackling populism, the role for the Liberal Democrats: my guest David Howarth and I ranged widely over the political landscape in the latest episode of Never Mind The Bar Charts. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes The core vote strategy pamphlet David Howarth and I wrote in 2015. My take on the role for liberalism in a post-coronavirus world. The positive pay-offs from Angela Merkel's decision to welcome many more immigrants to Germany. How Paddy Ashdown's strategy worked in the 1990s. The risks of hung Parliaments. New research into the Liberal Democrats and tuition fees: podcast episode with Chris Butler. Listening to party members: how you can tell me your views. Licence to be Bad: How Economics Corrupted Us by Jonathan Aldred: Amazon / Waterstones. Island Stories: Britain and Its History in the Age of Brexit by David Reynolds: Amazon / Waterstones. The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India

  • That tuition fees promise: what new research shows about the lessons to learn

    02/09/2020 Duración: 44min

    There was a weird role reversal at the heart of the Liberal Democrat decisions over tuition fees in 2010, as Chris Butler's academic research reveals. So I invited him on Never Mind The Bar Charts to discuss what he has found, the lessons for the Liberal Democrats and the implications more generally about what makes for successful political parties. Show notes Chris Butler's research: When are governing parties more likely to respond to public opinion? The strange case of the Liberal Democrats and tuition fees. David Laws's book on the coalition negotiations. The front page of the 2010 general election manifesto. Ryan Coetzee's controversial take on the 2015 general election, and my take on his take along with my second take on his take. How to get right thinking about who might vote for you: a core vote strategy. Nick Clegg's tuition fees apology - including the musical remix. Chris Butler on Twitter. Music by Hugo Lee. New to listening to podcasts? Here are some tips on how to listen to podcasts.

  • Giving the Liberals direction, purpose and ambition: lessons from David Steel's leadership

    19/08/2020 Duración: 01h02min

    After the popularity of the previous discussion with Duncan Brack about lessons for the Liberal Democrats from Jo Grimond’s time as party leader, Duncan returns to discuss another former leader. This time, it’s David Steel. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes British Liberal Leaders edited by Duncan Brack, Robert Ingham and Tony Little: Amazon / Waterstones. David Steel: Rising Hope to Elder Statesman by David Torrance: Amazon / Waterstones. The Pact: The Inside Story of the Lib–Lab Government, 1977-1978 by Alistair Michie and Simon Hoggart: Amazon / Waterstones. A House Divided: The Lib-Lab Pact and the Future of British Politics by David Steel: Amazon. Against Goliath by David Steel: Amazon. Peace, Reform and Liberation: A History of Liberal Politics in Britain 1679-2011, compiled by Robert Ingham and Duncan Brack. Our previous podcast episode looking at Jo Grimond. The Liberal Democrat History Group. Follow Duncan Brack on Twitter.

  • Compulsory voting: how it happened in Australia, and could it happen in the UK?

    12/08/2020 Duración: 38min

    Time for an international turn on Never Mind The Bar Charts, with Professor Judith Brett, author of From Secret Ballot to Democracy Sausage: How Australia got compulsory voting. It's a great book about how democracy developed in Australia. Not only how voting ended up mandatory but also why so many people eat sausages when voting, the flirtation with round ballot papers and the way British politicians accidentally gave the Australians more democracy than they realised. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes Which places use compulsory voting (including those who have it but don't enforce it). Talk of using weekend voting in the UK. Optimising names at the start of the London telephone book. From Secret Ballot to Democracy Sausage: How Australia got compulsory voting by Judith Brett: Waterstones / Amazon (though watch out that Amazon's paperback prices seem very messed up and Waterstones will almost certainly be a much better deal). I'll take

  • Where next for the Liberal Democrats? What the data says, with Tim Bale

    05/08/2020 Duración: 42min

    Following the publication of the research report Where next for the Liberal Democrats?, I invited one of its co-authors, Professor Tim Bale, back on the show to talk about what the report found and the lessons for future Lib Dem strategy. Show notes Where next for the Liberal Democrats? - the report we discuss on the show. Creating a core vote for the Liberal Democrats: my original pamphlet with David Howarth. The previous interview with Cllr Anton Georgiou, by-election winner in Brent. Follow Tim Bale on Twitter. Music by Hugo Lee. New to listening to podcasts? Here are some tips on how to listen to podcasts. Enjoy the show? Spread the word Follow the show on Twitter. Like the show on Facebook. Share the show's website, www.NeverMindTheBarCharts.com.

  • Will British politics become less volatile, and how important is ideology? Interview with Professor Jane Green

    31/07/2020 Duración: 55min

    I was delighted to be joined for the latest episode of Never Mind The Bar Charts by one of the most important political scientists in Britain, Professor Jane Green. Amongst her many achievements, she’s co-director of the British Election Study, which is to British elections what Wisden is to cricket or Oxford is to dictionaries: that is, an absolutely essential source for anyone wanting to understand what has happened in our elections and why. Among the many topics we covered were whether British politics is going to become less volatile and how important competence (as opposed to ideology) is in determining who wins elections. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes The British Election Study website is full of news and data. Electoral Shocks: The Volatile Voter in a Turbulent World: Amazon / Waterstones. The Politics of Competence: Parties, Public Opinion and Voters: Amazon / Waterstones. The report on Lib Dem prospects from The UK in a Chan

  • If the Liberal Democrats were to have an anthem, the song I'd pick is...

    23/07/2020 Duración: 56min

    What makes someone a Liberal Democrat? What should the party's anthem be? Can you order cheese toasties via the internet? And can I avoid embarrassing myself in a quiz about chocolate? Find out the answers to all these and more in my recent appearance on the excellent Politics of Sound podcast with Iain Carnegie. Show notes The Beautiful South music video with the elephant. Subscribe to the Politics of Sound podcast. Follow Iain Carnegie on Twitter. Never Mind The Bar Charts music by Hugo Lee. New to listening to podcasts? Here are some tips on how to listen to podcasts. Enjoy the show? Spread the word Follow the show on Twitter. Like the show on Facebook. Share the show's website, www.NeverMindTheBarCharts.com.

  • What really happens at the grassroots when political parties push new ways of campaigning?

    16/07/2020 Duración: 43min

    What impact is digital campaigning having on politics, and is it for the better or the worse? That's what I discuss in the latest episode of Never Mind The Bar Charts with Kate Dommett, Senior Lecturer in the Public Understanding of Politics at the University of Sheffield. We started off with her research into how new ways of digital campaigning do - or don't - take root at the political grassroots of parties. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes Katharine Dommett, Luke Temple and Patrick Seyd, "Dynamics of Intra-Party Organisation in the Digital Age: A Grassroots Analysis of Digital Adoption", Parliamentary Affairs. The relative failure of Barack Obama's 2008 campaign: a critique of my talk, the original talk and what the electoral data shows. Report from the House of Lords Committee on Democracy and Digital Technologies. Bad News has a section on filter bubbles. Was the impact of Cambridge Analytica over-hyped? Social Media and Politics p

  • Saving the party from disaster: lessons from Jo Grimond for the Liberal Democrats

    10/07/2020 Duración: 51min

    I've tried something a little different for this episode of Never Mind The Bar Charts: taking a look at the career of a previous party leader to see the lessons for the current Liberal Democrats. I picked Jo Grimond, who saved the Liberal Party from disastrous election results and had a plan for a realignment on the left of British politics. You might be able to spot some parallels there... No surprise that for my guest, I'm joined by the closest thing the party has to an official historian, Duncan Brack. Hope you enjoy the show and do let us know what you think of it; would you like more shows looking at the lessons from other party leaders? Show notes Mark Egan’s book Coming into Focus: The Transformation of the Liberal Party 1945-64. The Orpington by-election. Jo Grimond campaigning for Britain to join the European Economic Community (EEC). Why I am a Liberal Democrat, edited by Duncan Brack: Waterstones / Amazon. Great Liberal Speeches, edited by Duncan Brack and Robert Ingham: Waterstones / Amazo

  • What we can learn from Republicans campaigning against President Donald Trump

    01/07/2020 Duración: 41min

    Laura Shields and Dirk Singer, communications consultants, members of Democrats Abroad and authors of an excellent piece “Swimming with the sharks: What progressives can learn from Republicans Against Trump” join me for the latest episode of Never Mind The Bar Charts. You may recall an earlier show had Rob Blackie on talking about what the party can learn from how Trump himself communicates. This time with Laura and Dirk, the show looks at what can be learnt from those campaigning against Trump. Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes Swimming with the sharks: What progressives can learn from Republicans Against Trump. Rob Blackie episode on learning from Trump. The Lincoln Project and some of its adverts. The Meidas Touch group and some of its adverts. Republican Voters Against Trump and some of its adverts. The Taliban bounties story. My book about trusting - or not trusting - the news. Donald Trump boasting about slowing down coronavirus

  • The virtues of Marmite: Tim Farron's advice on being a Liberal Democrat party leader

    28/06/2020 Duración: 47min

    Welcome to a special re-run of a previous, but once again very relevant, edition of Never Mind The Bar Charts. It is from June 2019, which feels a long time ago now but the calendar says that was only 12 months ago. It was the time of the party’s last leadership election, and I did an interview with Tim Farron about his experience as leader of the Liberal Democrats. We focused on his advice for the next party leader as well as tips on what members should ask in hustings meetings. Both Tim’s advice and tips are still very relevant, so here is that episode again. And do also take a listen to the episode I did recently with Tim Bale, where we also cooked up great hustings questions. Hope you enjoy the repeat. Show notes Jonathan Calder's David Steel versus John Pardoe categorisation for Liberal Democrat leadership contests. Paperclip design. Vince Cable's Stalin to Mr Bean moment at Prime Minister's Questions. The Lib Dems did indeed, as Tim Farron mentioned, once hit 4% in the polls after the 2015 electio

  • Making the Liberal Democrats win more elections - with Cllr Lisa Smart

    19/06/2020 Duración: 39min

    Apologies if you got a truncated version of this episode first time around. The podcast host has been playing up a bit but you should now be able to hear the interview all the way through to the end. How must the Liberal Democrats change in order to win more often? Listen to me discuss this with Lisa Smart, chair of the party's Federal Communications and Elections Committee (FCEC). Feedback very welcome, and do share this podcast with others who you think may enjoy it. Show notes Lisa Smart's election to chair the party's main elections committee. The show with Tim Bale talking about what opposition parties must do. The independent review into the 2019 general election. Support electoral reform? Join the Electoral Reform Society. The Star Trek reference. The pros and cons of Steve Webb's approach to being a minister. How to make targeting work. Lisa Smart on Twitter. Enjoy the show? Spread the word Follow the show on Twitter. Like the show on Facebook. Subscribe, rate or review via your favourit

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